Milton Friedman on the WOD

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R-Tex12

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I thought many would find this to be an interesting article regarding the War on Drugs even though it's nearly 10 years old. Friedman seems to make a LOT of sense. This is a New York Times copyrighted article: If my posting it here violates any copyright rules/laws, I ask that the mods please delete the post. TIA

Rick


http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/45/337.html


There’s no justice in the war on drugs

By Milton Friedman, The New York Times, Sunday 11 January 1998

STANFORD—Twenty-five years ago, President Richard M. Nixon announced a War on Drugs. I criticized the action on both moral and expediential grounds in my Newsweek column of May 1, 1972, Prohibition and Drugs:

On ethical grounds, do we have the right to use the machinery of government to prevent an individual from becoming an alcoholic or a drug addict? For children, almost everyone would answer at least a qualified yes. But for responsible adults, I, for one, would answer no. Reason with the potential addict, yes. Tell him the consequences, yes. Pray for and with him, yes. But I believe that we have no right to use force, directly or indirectly, to prevent a fellow man from committing suicide, let alone from drinking alcohol or taking drugs.

That basic ethical flaw has inevitably generated specific evils during the past quarter century, just as it did during our earlier attempt at alcohol prohibition.

1. The use of informers. Informers are not needed in crimes like robbery and murder because the victims of those crimes have a strong incentive to report the crime. In the drug trade, the crime consists of a transaction between a willing buyer and willing seller. Neither has any incentive to report a violation of law. On the contrary, it is in the self-interest of both that the crime not be reported. That is why informers are needed. The use of informers and the immense sums of money at stake inevitably generate corruption—as they did during Prohibition. They also lead to violations of the civil rights of innocent people, to the shameful practices of forcible entry and forfeiture of property without due process.

As I wrote in 1972: . . . addicts and pushers are not the only ones corrupted. Immense sums are at stake. It is inevitable that some relatively low-paid police and other government officials—and some high-paid ones as well—will succumb to the temptation to pick up easy money.

2. Filling the prisons. In 1970, 200,000 people were in prison. Today, 1.6 million people are. Eight times as many in absolute number, six times as many relative to the increased population. In addition, 2.3 million are on probation and parole. The attempt to prohibit drugs is by far the major source of the horrendous growth in the prison population.

There is no light at the end of that tunnel. How many of our citizens do we want to turn into criminals before we yell enough?

3. Disproportionate imprisonment of blacks. Sher Hosonko, at the time Connecticut’s director of addiction services, stressed this effect of drug prohibition in a talk given in June 1995:

Today in this country, we incarcerate 3,109 black men for every 100,000 of them in the population. Just to give you an idea of the drama in this number, our closest competitor for incarcerating black men is South Africa. South Africa—and this is pre-Nelson Mandela and under an overt public policy of apartheid—incarcerated 729 black men for every 100,000. Figure this out: In the land of the Bill of Rights, we jail over four times as many black men as the only country in the world that advertised a political policy of apartheid.

4. Destruction of inner cities. Drug prohibition is one of the most important factors that have combined to reduce our inner cities to their present state. The crowded inner cities have a comparative advantage for selling drugs. Though most customers do not live in the inner cities, most sellers do. Young boys and girls view the swaggering, affluent drug dealers as role models. Compared with the returns from a traditional career of study and hard work, returns from dealing drugs are tempting to young and old alike. And many, especially the young, are not dissuaded by the bullets that fly so freely in disputes between competing drug dealers—bullets that fly only because dealing drugs is illegal. Al Capone epitomizes our earlier attempt at Prohibition; the Crips and Bloods epitomize this one.

5. Compounding the harm to users. Prohibition makes drugs exorbitantly expensive and highly uncertain in quality. A user must associate with criminals to get the drugs, and many are driven to become criminals themselves to finance the habit. Needles, which are hard to get, are often shared, with the predictable effect of spreading disease. Finally, an addict who seeks treatment must confess to being a criminal in order to qualify for a treatment program. Alternatively, professionals who treat addicts must become informers or criminals themselves.

6. Undertreatment of chronic pain. The Federal Department of Health and Human Services has issued reports showing that two-thirds of all terminal cancer patients do not receive adequate pain medication, and the numbers are surely higher in nonterminally ill patients. Such serious undertreatment of chronic pain is a direct result of the Drug Enforcement Agency’s pressures on physicians who prescribe narcotics.

7. Harming foreign countries. Our drug policy has led to thousands of deaths and enormous loss of wealth in countries like Colombia, Peru and Mexico, and has undermined the stability of their governments. All because we cannot enforce our laws at home. If we did, there would be no market for imported drugs. There would be no Cali cartel. The foreign countries would not have to suffer the loss of sovereignty involved in letting our advisers and troops operate on their soil, search their vessels and encourage local militaries to shoot down their planes. They could run their own affairs, and we, in turn, could avoid the diversion of military forces from their proper function.

Can any policy, however high-minded, be moral if it leads to widespread corruption, imprisons so many, has so racist an effect, destroys our inner cities, wreaks havoc on misguided and vulnerable individuals and brings death and destruction to foreign countries?

Note: Milton Friedman, the Nobelist in economics, is a senior research fellow at the Hoover Institution. Copyright 1998 The New York Times Company
 
An extremel good article. Won't change anybodies mind on the subject of course. Unfortunetly :cuss: :banghead:

One extremely minor point however, the US health care system is getting a bit better about undertreatment of pain in general as refered to by the quote below.

Undertreatment of chronic pain. The Federal Department of Health and Human Services has issued reports showing that two-thirds of all terminal cancer patients do not receive adequate pain medication, and the numbers are surely higher in nonterminally ill patients. Such serious undertreatment of chronic pain is a direct result of the Drug Enforcement Agency’s pressures on physicians who prescribe narcotics.


Pain is now recognized as the 4th Vital Sign along with Temp/Pulse/Respirations. Patients (especially terminal) have a large amount of control over their pain management. PCA pumps(Patient Controlled Aneshthia, where the patient pushes a button and a pumb hooked to their IV gives them an immediatedose of pain med that goes directly into their veins and starts taking effect within a minute. Computer controlled so there are set limits) are one the top 10 inventions in the 20th Century IMHO :)

Some of it still sucks big time ( I think that's OK with Arts Grandma, isnt it? :uhoh: ) no arguments at all.

We are now getting patients that do not want pain meds because they have been brainwashed to the extant that they think that drugs are bad not the misuse of drugs .:banghead:

And don't get me started on Medical Marijuana :cuss:

NukemJim
 
The illegality of drugs boggles my mind. I fear anyone whose mind isn't sent reeling by a good pondering on the topic.

The scariest part of the War on Drugs is that while it has just as adverse an effect on the population as Prohibition, we accept it because we are able to compartmentalize its effects and convince ourselves that legalization would be surrender. It's weed, you boobs! Not the NVA.

It scares the hell out of me to think that we've generally become convinced that the government's job is to do to people what is generally perceived to be "good," often in the form of said people what for.
 
I think he's dead on.



I'm bookmarking this article. He's argued the point i often do much better than I can.
 
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